In this Issue
Scandinavian Studies is interested in the cultures of the Nordic countries: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Founded in 1911, the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study (the supporting organization) has as its objectives:
- The promotion of Scandinavian study and instruction in America;
- The encouragement of original research in this country in the fields of Scandinavian languages, literatures, history, culture, and society and the publication of the results of such research in the quarterly journal Scandinavian Studies;
- The fostering of closer relations between persons interested in Scandinavian studies in North America and elsewhere.
published by
University of Illinois Pressviewing issue
Volume 91, Number 1-2, Spring/Summer 2019Table of Contents

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View Sweden and St. Barthélemy: Exceptionalisms, Whiteness, and the Disappearance of Slavery from Colonial History
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View Mapping Land and People in the North: Early Modern Colonial Expansion, Exploitation, and Knowledge
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View Intra-Nordic Differences, Colonial/Racial Histories, and National Narratives: Rewriting Finnish History
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View Women in the Arctic: Gendering Coloniality in Travel Narratives from the Far North, 1907–1930
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View (In)visibility and the Danish Body in Sultekunstnerinde (2004), a Novel on Postcolonial Greenland
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ISSN | 2163-8195 |
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Print ISSN | 0036-5637 |
Launched on MUSE | 2019-07-31 |
Open Access | No |
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study